Anonymous releases how-to instructions on fooling facial recognition

.Here's a predicament: you don't want the government using high-tech face scanning technology to track every inch of your walk to the post office, but you also don't want to take a sledgehammer to your neighborhood surveillance camera. What do you do?

Don't worry, concerned citizen! Big Brother may indeed be watching, but that doesn't mean you have to make his unwarranted surveillance mission easy to operate.

Although little news has developed as of late in regards to TrapWire, a global surveillance operation that RT blew the cover off of nearly two weeks ago, opposition waged at the world-wide intelligence network is still rampant. Now in one of the newest videos uploaded to the Web to make people aware of TrapWire, a person claiming to be involved with Anonymous is trying to spread a YouTube clip that offers helpful suggestions on how to rage against the machine, properly and peacefully.

Last week, hacktivists proposed several campaigns aimed at eliminating TrapWire feeds by rendering the equipment thought to be linked to the intelligence system completely useless. In lieu of smashing camera lenses and spraying surveillance gear in sudsy liquid, though, a new video, "Anonymous -- Fighting TrapWire," offers instructions on how to prevent the acceleration of the surveillance state by means of passive resistant.

"Many of you have heard the recent stories about TrapWire," the video begins. "Constant video surveillance is an issue we presently face. However, there are a number of ways that you can combat this surveillance."

From there, the clip's narrator offers a few suggestions and helping the average American avoid getting caught in TrapWire without resorting to the destruction of property.

"Wearing a mask is a common way to keep your identity hidden," the voice explains, "However, a mask does not protect against biometric authentication. In addition, this can also cause problems depending where you want to go."

"Another way to avoid facial recognition is to tilt your head more than 15 degrees to the side," the clip continues. "Due to limits in their programming, they will not be able to detect that a face is present, though there are very obvious cons to doing this. Using a similar method, you can distort your face through elaborate makeup. This method also takes advantage of software limits as the computer will not be able to detect a face. But these are tiresome ways that tend to draw attention to yourself. Surely there are better solutions to avoid being added to a database."

The narrator also explains that laser pointers have been documented to disrupt the powers of surveillance cameras and that, "With nothing more than a hat, some infrared LEDs, some wiring and a 9 Volt battery," it's a piece of cake to render oneself completely invisible. By rigging a DIY system of small lights affixed to a baseball cap, the video claims you can create a device that "guarantees complete anonymity to cameras while appearing perfectly normal to the rest of the world."

"While the government may be hell bent on watching us at every moment of every day, we are not helpless. There are always ways of fighting back. Let's remind them that 1984 was not an instruction manual," the video concludes.

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